Tuesday, May 25, 2010

There’s nothing like the taste of a sweet, juicy papaya to remind you of that island vacation you’ve been dreaming about.

Why not offer your customers a taste of a tropical paradise this summer by providing samples of fresh-cut papaya?

Papayas are a great summertime fruit, perfect for adding to fruit salads and packing along for picnics, says Mary Ostlund, director of marketing for grower-shipper Brooks Tropicals Inc., Homestead, Fla.

Bottoms out

Ostlund says papayas are best displayed stacked in no more than four layers with their bottoms facing out. When using wicker baskets, placing a paper towel under the papayas helps prevent bruising.

Ostlund recommends displaying papayas among other tropical fruits.

Though papayas are popular in other parts of the world, many consumers in the U.S. and Canada still are not familiar with them. To draw attention and to show customers how to eat a papaya, cut one in half, scoop out the seeds and wrap it in film with a slice of lime and a spoon.

Don’t limit papaya displays to the tropical section, Ostlund says. Papaya halves with limes are a good way to sell fruit that is becoming overripe. Papayas become sweeter as they ripen, so they can still taste great. Ostlund says cut papayas can be displayed with granola bars or crackers as an on-the-go lunch in the ready-to-eat section. Offering fresh-cut salads of papaya, cantaloupe and honeydew might help shoppers see them as a mainstream ingredient, she says.

Because papaya is becoming a popular salsa ingredient, Ostlund suggests building displays of papayas with other salsa ingredients, such as limes, coconuts, tomatoes, onions, cilantro or celery.

A ripe papaya will yield to gentle pressure, and its color will be mostly yellow. Papayas also become more fragrant as they ripen. When ripe, papayas should be refrigerated to increase shelf life to seven to 10 days, he says.

May is the time to think about summer papaya promotions, grower-shippers say. June, July and August are expected to bring promotable volumes of high-quality fruit.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Excerpts from an article in The Packer by Doug Ohlemeier published on 05/03/2010Growers say a late April windstorm may have damaged a portion of south Florida's early avocado crop. An April 26 storm brought high winds exceeding 50 mph and thunder and lightning that blew an undetermined amount of small fruit off trees, grower-shippers said.

Bill Brindle, vice president of sales management for Brooks Tropicals Inc., Homestead, Fla., said growers would likely have a better idea of possible by damage by the end of May, when light harvesting normally begins.He said it’s hard to estimate the percentage of damage caused to the pinhead-sized fruit but said growers are still expecting a good-sized crop.

“This was one of those storm systems that moves through in April,” he said in early May. “But this one was particularly strong. We are in the middle of our fruit set period and have lots of small fruit and flowers that are about to turn into fruit. Both those could be easily destroyed by winds of that magnitude.” Brindle said he expects the crop to be a little less than initially estimated.

The Florida Avocado Administrative Committee, Homestead, is forecasting a 1 million bushel crop, up from the 929,127-pound crop produced in 2009-10, which ended shipments in March.Though Florida growers typically start harvesting their large green-skinned avocados in late May, commercial volumes normally ramp up by mid-June with promotable volumes usually hitting in early July.